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Propaganda in Autocracies: Institutions, Information, and the Politics of Belief

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A dictator's power is secure, the authors begin in this muscular, impressive study, only as long as citizens believe in it. When citizens suddenly believe otherwise, a dictator's power is anything but, as the Soviet Union's collapse revealed. This conviction – that power rests ultimately on citizens' beliefs – compels the world's autocrats to invest in sophisticated propaganda. This study draws on the first global data set of autocratic propaganda, encompassing nearly eight million newspaper articles from fifty-nine countries in six languages. The authors document dramatic variation in propaganda across autocracies: in coverage of the regime and its opponents, in narratives about domestic and international life, in the threats of violence issued to citizens, and in the domestic events that shape it. The book explains why Russian President Vladimir uses Donald Trump as a propaganda tool and why Chinese state propaganda is more effusive than any point since the Cultural Revolution.

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  • Offers new insights into how repressive governments maintain power, and what we can infer about those governments from what they tell their citizens
  • Documents dramatic variation in propaganda across autocracies: encompassing over eight million newspaper articles from 59 countries in six languages
  • Explains the uses of propaganda during major historical events such as Russian President Vladimir Putin's use of Donald Trump as a propaganda tool and why the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) flagship propaganda newspaper is more positive than at any point since the Cultural Revolution
Authors: Carter Brett, Carter Erin Baggott
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 552
ISBN: 9781009271233
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

Part I. Foundations:
1. Persuasion and domination
2. A theory of autocratic propaganda
3. A global dataset of autocratic propaganda
Part II. The Political Origins of Propaganda Strategies:
4. The politics of pro-regime propaganda
5. Narrating the domestic
6. Narrating the world
7. Threatening citizens with repression
Part III. The Propaganda Calendar:
8. The propagandist's dilemma
9. Memory and forgetting
Part IV. Propaganda, Protest, and the Future:
10. Propaganda and protest
11. Conclusion
List of figures
List of tables.

Brett Carter is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Southern California and a Hoover Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution. Brett received a Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University and has previously held fellowships at the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies and Stanford's Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law.

Erin Baggott Carter is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Southern California and a Hoover Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution. She is also a non-resident scholar at the UCSD 21st Century China Center. She has previously held fellowships at Stanford's Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law and the Center for International Security and Cooperation. She received a Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University.

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